Cincinnati Police Department has 16 unsolved murders

October 3, 2018 | Brainwave Science

SITUATION

In Cincinnati, Ohio police is in need of urgent help to solve 16 cold cases. “We need more of the community to step up. We need our people. All our people, white, black, Latino, to step up and say we are tired of being tired and we are tired of being scared,” Steve Sherman said, Outreach coordinator at The Cincinnati Human Relations Commission.

Most of the crimes are still unsolved since 2016 and police is seeking help to find suspects and perpetrators. Two specific cases they referred to, include the case of 27-year-old James Stephen who died from multiple gunshot wounds on March 28th, 2016 at 10 p.m according to police. He was found dead in his parked car in Lower Price Hill, on Neave Street near Storrs Street, police said. Police do not currently have any suspects. In the second case, a 24-year-old Iesha Williams was shot to death after several people opened fire as they drove past her red avalanche pickup truck causing Williams to drive into a metro access van, according to police. Details released by police state that the crime happened in the 4800 block of Reading Road in Bond Hill, a gray sedan fired shots at the SUV.

“We are gauging by the evidence that six to nine shots were fired. We are basing that on the evidence,” Captain Russ Neville said. In both the cases the investigation so far has no led to any credible evidence.

CHALLENGE

If you’re murdered in America, there’s a 1 in 3 chance that the police won’t identify your killer. To use the FBI’s terminology, the national “clearance rate” for homicide today is 64.1 percent. Fifty years ago, it was more than 90 percent. Criminologists estimate that at least 200,000 murders have gone unsolved since the 1960s, leaving family and friends to wait and wonder. New tools such as DNA analysis have helped, but that’s been offset by worsening relationships between police and the public.

It may be the most important function of law enforcement — bringing to justice those who take the life of another. Police, prosecutors and other law enforcement experts cite a number of systemic factors that make it difficult for investigators to find, let alone convict, suspects in many homicide cases. There is a double-edged sword, walking a fine line a tough job for the cops on the street who have been recent targets of public rage and mistrust, criminal investigation detectives who are entrusted with responsibilities that demand that they solve crimes swiftly and support delivery of justice. The fact that so many killings go unsolved takes a profound toll and, in some cases, reinforces the negative perception that some communities have of authorities.

Only about half of the violent crimes and a third of the property crimes that occur in the United States each year are reported to police. And most of the crimes that are reported don’t result in the arrest, charging and prosecution of a suspect, according to government statistics. This must change, and the change is coming in the form of an advanced forensic technology developed by Brainwave Science. Novel, scientific, exceptionally accurate, cost-effective and easy to use iCognative technology is here, provided only by Brainwave Science. With unprecedented accuracy rates of over 99% in every single instance, the technology outshines and outperforms any other tool in the market today. With the use of iCognative, law enforcement can distinguish between innocents and perpetrators and collect valuable intelligence to solve cases of violent crimes. iCognativeplays an instrumental role in the delivery of truth and justice through enhancement of intelligence collection and evidence verification.

The technology arms Cincinnati Police Department (CPD) homicide detectives with arsenal likes of one they have never experienced before. Empowered with iCognative CPD can not only solve 16 cold cases but can also address any type of investigation super-fast because the technology provided by Brainwave Science is applicable in almost all cases.

In both the cases made public by CPD details related to case such as: age of the victim; name and gender of the victim; location of crime; time and date crime happened; color and model of cars spotted at the time of crime; witness testimonies along with other investigation details known only to the specific agencies involved are utilized as Stimuli to conduct a iCognativetest on all suspects as well as witnesses. With the use of iCognative test both the cases can be solved very easily in a timely and cost-effective manner. There is no chance for any false-positives or false-negatives because the technology is fool-proof and the science of P300 beind iCognative is proven. Objective and system driven, modernized and highly accurate, unbeatable and portable iCognative technology by Brainwave Science can surely be considered a paradigm shift in the field of security and investigations.

Cincinnati Police Department can very well avail the benefits afforded by this technology to support the delivery of justice to the families of 16 cases who await to see some form of closure for the crimes that happened against them and their loved ones. iCognative sets the benchmark for innovation and performance as it is a highly advanced, non-intrusive, and affordable security solution, posing great value for law enforcement.